'Artbuster-Ji Bark's Life Size Collection' is one of the biggest Hollywood Figure Exhibition in the world. It was held in Seoul Yeouido island MBC exhibition hall from 17th July, 2015 to 25th September. It is very special in 2 points. First, his collections are Life-size. Second, they are Custom Art which is limited edition. If you couldn't visit Ji Bark Collection yet, Onederful tonight!

Find and replant the last Tree of Life on earth, our shared consciousness. Unlock the Key laid out in the landscape, activating shifts within us. Decipher clues from symbol, myth, the Transit of Venus, the London 2012 Olympics, 'The Lord of the Rings', 'His Dark Materials', 'The Lost Symbol' and more. Adapt to earth's changed magnetic field. Request healing from the Tree. Illustrated. Book 2.

Come join me for this 50-image photo journal as I cycle and hike across New Zealand. In this fourth volume I'll be cycling with great anticipation to the Hobbiton Shire, which was built for The Lord of the Rings movie series. From Bilbo Baggins home to the Green Dragon Tavern for a pint -- the attention to detail is amazing. I hope you enjoy these images and travel thoughts.

“Watching ‘The Lord of the Rings’ With God” will open your eyes to the symbolism, allegorical aspects, and subtle wonders of Middle-earth in a way you never expected… as you watch the franchise with God at your side.

Did you know during a war, Tolkien and his wife communicated using a secret code in his letters created by Tolkien as a means to get around the British Army's postal censorship?
Or did you know The Lord of the Rings started off as a personal exploration of Tolkien's interests in philology, religion, fairy tales, and Norse and Celtic mythology.?

A parody collection of diaries, where The Lord of the Rings main characters tell their personal stories while battling to destroy SourDong’s evil Ring. As they bungle their way through preposterous plights and sinister skullduggery, Middle-dirt hangs over a cliff of absurdity.

In a 1960 letter, J. R. R. Tolkien referred to The Lord of the Rings when he wrote, “The Dead Marshes and the approaches to the Morannon owe something to Northern France after the Battle of the Somme. They owe more to William Morris and his Huns and Romans, as in The House of the Wolfings or The Roots of the Mountains.” With a foreword and introduction, this is the text of that classic tale.